(Spartikus again declines to say what he thinks the simplest living thing would be like)
Yep, you even admitted it here:
i told you to use whatever you want to use
So I gave you one you possibly agree with. And again you declined to say. Dodging is pretty much all you can do here, it seems.
Barbarian observes:
Yep, you and your buddy Dawkins want to make evolution inconsistent with God.
Fortunately for you, it's not a salvation issue.
Well you and Dawkins both believe man got here through the process of evolution
No.
"You don't have a soul, you are a soul. You have a body." - C.S. Lewis
it is so inconsistent with Christianity you have deny the whole book of Genesis and Jesus words that if you can't believe Genesis how can you believe him.
As you learned, evolution is consistent with Genesis, but YE creationism denies God's word in Genesis.
There is nothing in Genesis that denies evolution, but it explicitly denies the "life ex nihilo" believe of YE creationism.
Remember we have different beliefs there also. I believe my salvation comes from the grace of God and not something I can earn.
I'm glad you accept that. But why then won't you also accept God's word that we are justified by works as well as by faith? Cafeteria Christians are lukewarm, in their faith.
But believing in evolution I guess you can't believe that Christ actually paid your payment for sin on the cross, since the penalty of sin is death.
You conclude that because you have failed to understand what God told Adam. If you accept it God's way you'd know what that death was, and why it was necessary for Jesus to die to save us. Again, lukewarm isn't what you need to be.
If you want to continue this somewhere else, start a thread in the right forum. I understand it's a concern for you, but I have already fully accepted His word in this.
Barbarian regarding the idea of "novel" features:
Nope. So far, everything we see is a modification of something else.
Actually, humans evolved from other apes. Just saying...
And where did that ancestor evolve from?
Primitive primate. Would you like to see the evidence for that?
Barbarian suggests:
So now it's time for you to show us which step couldn't evolve that way.
Here's you chance. What features could not have evolved. BTW, eukaryotes took about 2 billion years to evolve, and seem to have done so by endosymbiosis. Would you like to learn the evidence for that?
Spartikus dodges the question:
So I guess this is the part where you start dodging the question and trying to get me to waste my time.
You made an assertion. I'm asking you to support it. If you don't want to do that, we'll move on.
I believe God created all species after their kind.
If you'll go that far, why not also accept the way He did it?
Can you show empirical evidence of evolution of any novel feature.
Sure. The evolution of the ability to utilize nylon by a species of bacteria. Directly observed. The evolution of a new enzyme that provides, in humans, almost complete immunity to hardening of the arteries. It happened a rather short time ago, and so we were able to trace that mutation back to a single individual who lived about a hundred years ago.
How many would you like to see?
Barbarian observes:
Denial won't help you. It's clear that no designer would make humans out of modified quadruped parts. But if we evolved from quadrupeds, then the reason is perfectly obvious.
(denial)
That's a testable claim. Show us something in the human skeleton that's not found in the skeleton of any quadruped. Good luck.
(declines to provide one)
Neither can anyone else. Surprise.
Barbarian suggests:
Yep. Now show us, using the information equation why a new allele in a population increases the information in it.
(Declines to do it)
No surprise there You don't even know what "information" means, do you?
Ignorance isn't stupidity. You just don't know, do you?
That's how it's measured.e. You don't even know what "information" means, do you?
I am not trying to measure how quick information can be transmitted on a blog. How many times do I need to show you this has no usefulness in biology.
It's not about how quick it can be transmitted. It's about how much information is there. That's how it's used in biology. BTW, Shannon was aware that it was about biological information:
Claude Shannon: Biologist
The Founder of Information Theory Used Biology to Formulate the Channel Capacity
Claude Shannon founded information theory in the 1940s. The theory has long been known to be closely related to thermodynamics and physics through the similarity of Shannon's uncertainty measure to the entropy function. Recent work using information theory to understand molecular biology has unearthed a curious fact: Shannon's channel capacity theorem only applies to living organisms and their products, such as communications channels and molecular machines that make choices from several possibilities. Information theory is therefore a theory about biology, and Shannon was a biologist.
IEEE Eng Med Biol Mag. 2006; 25(1): 30–33.
Surprise. How did you suppose a biologist would know so much about information theory?
We conclude that information-theoretic calculations of the present level of sophistication do not provide any useful insights into molecular biological sequences.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science...22519305800542
Well, let's take a look...
Information theory in molecular biology
Christoph Adami (KGI, Caltech)
Subjects: Biomolecules (q-bio.BM); Populations and Evolution (q-bio.PE)
Journal reference: Physics of Life Reviews 1 (2004) 3-22
This article introduces the physics of information in the context of molecular biology and genomics. Entropy and information, the two central concepts of Shannon's theory of information and communication, are often confused with each other but play transparent roles when applied to statistical ensembles (i.e., identically prepared sets) of symbolic sequences. Such an approach can distinguish between entropy and information in genes, predict the secondary structure of ribozymes, and detect the covariation between residues in folded proteins. We also review applications to molecular sequence and structure analysis, and introduce new tools in the characterization of resistance mutations, and in drug design.
I understand this is your way of dodging the question. Your buddy Dawkins doesn't understand the field very well, and of course, it seems as though it's a complete mystery to you. It's fairly new to molecular biology, because molecular biology is fairly new. It's been long used in population genetics; I was in graduate school in the late 70s, and it was being appled then.
Barbarian suggests:
So just tell us what the video says. If you don't understand it well enough to explain it, how do you know it's right?
(he dodges)
Let's use something real from nature. But it doesn't matter what the allele is. Just calculate how the information will change if there's a new allele.
(he dodges)
You've been misled about what "information" means. Perhaps you want to argue that there are no useful mutations, which is quite a different issue. Would you like to learn about that?
(he dodges)
Let's say an animal has two alleles for a particular enzyme, both with the same activity and the same (0.5) frequency. (one nucleotide substitution normally doesn't change the activity of a large enzyme at all). The information for that is about 0.30. Now let's suppose that a new allele appears by mutation. Let's suppose that it's neutral or slightly favorable, so that eventually there are three alleles, each with about 0.33 frequency.
Now, the information in the population is about 0.48. An increase. Surprise.
But I'm guessing that "information" isn't what you really want to talk about, is it?
Spartikus, regarding his buddy, Dawkins:
No he would be your buddy, and he is correct.
Barbarian chuckles:
You and the atheists are wrong about God and creation. No way to sugar coat it for you. If you're smart, you'll stop taking direction from atheists.
So now I am to dumb to understand a simply question
I'm suggesting that if you don't understand a video enough to explain what it means, you can't know if it's right or not.
Taking advice from atheist, no.
I just noted that you and your buddy agree on the subject. You keep bringing him in to support your beliefs.
Barbarian chuckles:
Gunther is apparently unaware that biology uses Shannon's equation to accurately measure information in populations. Why do they use Shannon's equation instead of Gunther's idea?
It works. That's a big deal in science. It's why Gunther's idea isn't used in biology.
Surprise.
I realize math may not be your thing. But if you don't understand Shannon's equation and why it works, you can't hope to understand information.
No math was my favorite subject.
And yet you are mystified by summation notation. Odd.
Actually, it is. Often gene duplication will result in a change in the organism. But most often, it happens by gene duplication, followed by mutation of one of the copies. And as you know, that is something new.
Barbarian suggests:
Show me how the video proves that duplication plus mutation of one copy can't happen. I can show you some examples in which it did, if you like. Or if the video is just more unsupported denial, you can ignore my request.
(request denied)
O.K. We understand.
You continue to say everything is a modification of something already there but can not show where these features developed.
That's a testable claim. Pick some feature, and we'll see. There are things out there that we don't know yet, so you might get lucky. Let's see what you choose.
Barbarian observes:
Barry Hall, in his E. coli experiments directly observed it to produce a new, irreducibly complex enzyme system. Would you like me to show you that, again?
(confuses the lac operon with the Krebs cycle)
Barbarian chuckles:
Wrong research. It's not about citric acid cycle.
I understand the argument, just new it new it would be a waste of my time to explain it to you.
Ah, well, perhaps others here are smarter than the dumb old Barbarian. Show us for them.
More later...